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The Structure of the Earth and Plate Tectonics
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The Structure of the Earth and Plate Tectonics

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Structure of the Earth

• The Earth is made up of 4 main layers:– Inner Core– Outer Core– Mantle– Crust

Inner core

Outer core

Mantle

Crust

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The Crust• This is where we live!

• The Earth’s crust is made of:

Continental Crust

- thick (10-70km)- buoyant (less dense than oceanic crust) - mostly old

Oceanic Crust

- thin (~7 km)- dense (sinks under continental crust)- young

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How do we know what the Earth is made of?

• Geophysical surveys: seismic, gravity, magnetics, electrical, geodesy– Acquisition: land, air, sea and satellite– Geological surveys: fieldwork, boreholes, mines

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What is Plate Tectonics?

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• If you look at a map of the world, you may notice that some of the continents could fit together like pieces of a puzzle.

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Alfred WegenerAlfred Wegener

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Alfred WegenerAlfred Wegener – proposed that in the distant past, the Earth’s continents were all joined as a single landmass.

-South America and Africa would fit remarkably well, shoreline to shoreline.

-If the Americas were moved next to Africa and Europe, there would be a match of ancient continental rocks and tectonic (fold and fault) structures.

-PangaeaPangaea – when Wegener placed all the continents together like a puzzle, it formed a large landmass which he called Pangaea.

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Pangaea Puzzle!

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Plate Tectonics

• The Earth’s crust is divided into 12 major plates which are moved in various directions.

• This plate motion causes them to collide, pull apart, or scrape against each other.

• Each type of interaction causes a characteristic set of Earth structures or “tectonic” features.

• The word, tectonic, refers to the deformation of the crust as a consequence of plate interaction.

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World Plates

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What are tectonic plates made of?

• Plates are made of rigid lithosphere.

The lithosphere is made up of the crust and the upper part of the mantle.

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What lies beneath the tectonic plates?

• Below the lithosphere (which makes up the tectonic plates) is the asthenosphere.

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Plate Movement

• “Plates” of lithosphere are moved around by the underlying hot mantle convection cells

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What happens at tectonic plate boundaries?

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• Divergent

• Convergent

• Transform

Three types of plate boundary

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• Spreading ridges– As plates move apart new material is erupted to fill

the gap

Divergent Boundaries

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Age of Oceanic Crust

Courtesy of www.ngdc.noaa.gov

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• Iceland has a divergent plate boundary running through its middle

Iceland: An example of continental rifting

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• There are three styles of convergent plate boundaries– Continent-continent collision– Continent-oceanic crust collision– Ocean-ocean collision

Convergent Boundaries

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• Forms mountains, e.g. European Alps, Himalayas

Continent-Continent Collision

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Himalayas

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• Called SUBDUCTION

Continent-Oceanic Crust Collision

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• Oceanic lithosphere subducts underneath the continental lithosphere

• Oceanic lithosphere heats and dehydrates as it subsides

• The melt rises forming volcanism

• E.g. The Andes

Subduction

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• When two oceanic plates collide, one runs over the other which causes it to sink into the mantle forming a subduction zone.

• The subducting plate is bent downward to form a very deep depression in the ocean floor called a trench.

• The worlds deepest parts of the ocean are found along trenches. – E.g. The Mariana Trench is 11 km deep!

Ocean-Ocean Plate Collision

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• Where plates slide past each other

Transform Boundaries

Above: View of the San Andreas transform fault

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Practical Exercise 2

Where will the UK be in:1,000 years?

1,000,000 years?

1,000,000,000 years?

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…what’s the connection?

Volcanoes and Plate Tectonics…

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Volcanism is mostly focused at plate margins

Pacific Ring of Fire

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- Subduction - Rifting - Hotspots

Volcanoes are formed by:

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Pacific Ring of Fire

Hotspot volcanoes

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• Hot mantle plumes breaching the surface in the middle of a tectonic plate

What are Hotspot Volcanoes?

Photo: Tom Pfeiffer / www.volcanodiscovery.com

The Hawaiian island chain are examples of hotspot volcanoes.

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The tectonic plate moves over a fixed hotspot forming a chain of volcanoes.

The volcanoes get younger from one end to the other.

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…what’s the connection?

Earthquakes and Plate Tectonics…

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• As with volcanoes, earthquakes are not randomly distributed over the globe

• At the boundaries between plates, friction causes them to stick together. When built up energy causes them to break, earthquakes occur.

Figure showing the distribution of earthquakes around the globe

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Where do earthquakes form?

Figure showing the tectonic setting of earthquakes

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Plate Tectonics Summary

• The Earth is made up of 3 main layers (core, mantle, crust)

• On the surface of the Earth are tectonic plates that slowly move around the globe

• Plates are made of crust and upper mantle (lithosphere)

• There are 2 types of plate• There are 3 types of plate boundaries• Volcanoes and Earthquakes are closely linked to

the margins of the tectonic plates